Blockade of Almeida

Blockade of Almeida 1811
Part of Peninsular War

Location of Almeida in Portugal
Date 14 April to 10 May 1811
Location Almeida, Portugal
Result Successful French escape
Belligerents
French Empire United Kingdom,
Portugal
Commanders and leaders
Brig-Gen Antoine Brenier Maj-Gen William Erskine
Maj-Gen Alexander Campbell
Strength
1,400 13,000
Casualties and losses
360 captured 35 casualties

The Siege of Almeida (14 April - 10 May 1811) took place during the Peninsular War portion of the Napoleonic Wars. After a month-long blockade, the French garrison under Brigadier-General Antoine Brenier escaped, leaving the fortress in Anglo-Portuguese hands.

Almeida is located in eastern Portugal, near the border with Spain. The town had been captured from a Portuguese garrison after an earlier Siege of Almeida in 1810.

After Marshal André Masséna's retreat from Portugal, the French installed a garrison of 1,400 men under Brennier in the fortress. These troops were blockaded in the town by forces under Arthur Wellesley, 1st Duke of Wellington. Since the Anglo-Portuguese Army had no heavy guns to reduce the walls, they were forced to starve the garrison out. Because of this, this operation was technically a blockade rather than a siege.

From 3 to 5 May 1811, Masséna failed to relieve Almeida in the Battle of Fuentes de Onoro. During this time, the blockade was maintained by William Erskine's 5th and Alexander Campbell's 6th Divisions, plus Count Barbacena's 300-man Portuguese cavalry brigade.

With great skill, Brenier slipped his men through the Anglo-Portuguese lines on the night of 10-11 May. The fortifications were rigged with explosives and blew up after the French cleared out. During the night, 360 Frenchmen were captured. But the rest escaped when the French 31st Light Infantry Regiment from Maj-Gen Jean Reynier's II Corps ambushed the pursuing British 36th Foot Regiment, inflicting 35 casualties. A furious Wellington later wrote,

"They had about 13,000 to watch 1,400. There they were all sleeping in their spurs even; but the French got off. I begin to be of the opinion that there is nothing on earth so stupid as a gallant officer."[1]

References

  1. ^ Glover, p 156